Monday, January 13, 2014

Rookie Mistakes

1. When you still fish, try to leave the bait out as long as possible. The largest fish in the Lake are always the spookiest and they always assess the situation which could take a very long time. Any movement can scare that fish away forever. Personally, my bait was casted out for about 50 minutes before getting a run from a 25 lb Common carp.

2. Great fishing spots DON'T HAVE ADDRESSES.

3. Some rigs or baits will have you set the hook in a different way, or don't require a hook set at all:

- When using a hair rig, you don't require a hook set.

- A fish with a bony head/mouth may require multiple hook sets, or an over-exaggerated big one.

- A top water bait requires a delayed hook set.

- Most of the time, you only need a small hook set for small fish.

- When using a circle hook with bait, a fish that bites will automatically get set by itself from the rod bending. So in other words, the fish bends the rod, and sets the hook. I use circle hooks on all my hair rigs, and set up my drag that is loose enough for a large fish to take line and tight enough to bend the rod.

4. Put bait on the hook before you cast it out. I've literally seen people cast with no bait, and you probably know what happened next.

5. Never muscle a carp. I can't tell you how many local stories and people I've met that lost carp by not loosening their drag. A 12 LB Carp is capable of breaking 30 LB Braid. Their combination of strength, runs, spins, twists, swimming towards snags after getting hooked, and the ability to pull a rod in the water make it brutal on your fishing line.

6. Small catfish have fins and dorsal fins that flare out sharply like box cutter knives. Ive seen two people get cut up by one, which was really pathetic. So I always bring gloves just in case I have to deal with catfish.

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